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THE EXPONENT
NORTHERN NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
Vol. XVII
ABERDEEN, SOUTH DAKOTA. NOVEMBER 23, 1918
No. 1
TEN NEW MEMBERS
FACULTY
N. N. I. S. ADDS TO STAFF
Many New Faces Among 1918-1919
Faculty
Although the N. N. I. S. has been
unfortunate in losing many of its
very competent instructors, it has
been exceedingly fortunate in securing
the services of noted educational
men and women to help carry on
the work of the coining year.
The University of Chicago is well
represented, no less than three of
the new instructors being graduates
of that institution. Miss Olson, instructor
in public speaking and expression,
has, since leaving the university,
been teaching at the Ellendale,
N. D., Normal. This last summer
she received her M. A. degree
from Chicago.
Miss Eloise Smith, a former graduate
of the N. N. I. S. and assistant
art supervisor here, has the past
year been attending the University
of Chicago, from which she; too, received
her degree. Miss Husband,
who is connected with the educational
department, is a graduate of
both our own school and the University
of Minnesota.
A new but not exactly strange
member of the faculty is J. W.
Thomas, a graduate of the University
of Nebraska, who has the past
four years been superintendent of
schools in Roberts county. During
this time he has taken active part in
the joint institute at the N. N. I. S.
He comes to succeed Mr. Guhin in
the rural school and extension departments.
In Professor Charles Worf we
have another superintendent, he having
served the most recent four years
in Burke county, N. D. Fred W.
Smith, who served on the N. N. I.
S. faculty until 1914, has returned
to his old duties here, after having
served a number of years as president
of the State School of Forestry
at Bottineau. N. D.
An altogether amiable and deep-thinking
man has come to us in the
person of M. R. Stoker, who is to
have an important part in the educational
department of the Normal.
He comes from the Mayville, N. D.,
State Normal. and is a graduate of
the Illinois State Normal University
and of the University of Chicago.
J. H. Jensen is an eastern man-a
graduate of the University of Michigan.
He conies to share the science
work with Professor Smith. John
W. Hover comes from Bloomington.
Ill.. where he has been supervisor of
manual training in the city schools.
He will have here the work Professor
Heckman has overseen for so
many years. Miss Nordness, who
is to teach ancient history and arithmetic,
has been a student at Carleton
and Yankton colleges, and comes
well qualified for the work she is to
do.
With these new instructors to assist
those whose work has been
here before this, the students will
find a teaching force fully able and
thoroughly willing to lead them
along the pathway to wider knowledge
and experience, and may thus
find themselves "all set" for a great
year.
THE N. N. I. S. SERVICE FLAG
ARMY AND NAVY
Allyn Ahlers
Louis Aldrich
James Alger
Norman Amos
George Anas
Alfred Anderson
Paul Armantrout
Ward Ashford
Charles Aube
Wendell Bacon
Roy O. Baker
Harold Bartlett
Paul Benz
Christian Bentz
Carroll Bickelhaupt
Charles Harold Blair
John Blair
Lewis Blomster
Lincoln Boyd
Charles Brady
Carl Bremer
Lloyd Brown
William Bubbers
Curtis Burnham
Lawrence Burns
Ralph Butcher
Francis Byrne
Malcolm Byrne
Eugene Carey
Earl Chester
Horace Cloninger
Harold Cochrane
Arthur Coleman
Russell Craven
Wilbur Crosley
Ray Cummins
Lloyd Daniels
James Daniels
John Darling
Hobart Deacon
Donald Dent
George Dell
Rurdette DeWitte
Harvey Dockum
Henry Draeger
Wendell E. Dunn
Wynn Eakins
Earl Eckert
Wade Edmunds
Alvin Erbe
Leo Erwin
William Esau
Castle Farish
Robert Fessenden
Harry N. Fitch
Arthur Flakoll
Charles Fleischmann
Thomas Foss
Andy Fossum
Bert Fox
John Fox
Mack Fox
James Freeland
Oswald Friel
Delbert Gallett
Ralph Garman
Benjamin Gibbon
Wevman Gifford
Wilford Gigear
Lee J. Gillis
Verne Goodspeed
C. O. Gottschalk
Oscar Granger
Roe Granger
Christian Gross
Clifford Gullickson
George Guhin
*Curtiss Hall
Carl Hallberg
Claude Hamerly
Bert Hanicker
Leland Hanicker
Leo Hanna
Jay Haring
Samuel Harding
Arthur Hay
Percy Heron
John Hickman
Archie Hite
Raymond Hoefs
Robert Hopper
Andrew Hoover
Kenneth Hoover
Culvene Hubbard
Ernest Huntington
William Huntington
John Imlay
Edward Jackson
John H. Jackson
John J. Jackson
Arthur .Jenson
Arthur L. Johnson
Arthur W. Johnson
Axel Johnson
Clarence Johnson
Emmons Johnson
Leslie Johnson
Stanley Johnson
David Jones
Lynn Jones
Walter Kepke
Paul W. Kieser
Finch Kimberly
Willis Klepfer
Clare Kneedy
Rudolph Kraushaar
William Kreiter
Ruble Lavery
Arthur Lee
Fred LeLacheur
John Lewis
Alfred Lindboe
Laurence Lippert
Lyle Littlefield
Lewis Lockington
Herbert Lovejoy
Elmer Lowe
Ira Lum
Selmer Lunde
Ross Lynch
Milton Magee
James Madden
James P. Maloney
Paul Maloney
George Maricle
J. Wesley Martinie
George Masteller
Edward Matthews
Andy Monson
Jay McCoy
Lynn McKee
James E. McKenna
Donald McLean
C. Arnold Merkle
Fred. Merkle
Benjamin Miller
David Minard
Bernard Morrow
Henry Munsch
Adolph Olander
Carl Olander
James Oliver
Oscar Olsen
Harry Olson
Antonius Papavasiliou
George Parden
Roger Patrick
Roscoe D. Perkins
Van Buren Perry
Harry Pinkerton
William Pinkerton
Curtis Poole
Frederick Price
Howard Price
John Price
Norman Quam
Lloyd Rechamp
Harold Reed
Francis Regan
Ernest Rehfeld
Hobart Richards
Fred Richter
Ernest Rhodes
Robert Ronayne
Raymond Roth
Robert Roth
Harold Safford
Thomas Scanlon
Bernhard Schley
Clayton Schmidt
Wayne Schuchardt
Emil Schutte
Philip Seaman
Ralph Seaman
Bruce Semple
Loren Shanley
Maurice Shanley
Maurice Shevlin
Frank Sieh
Archie Sills
W. Ivan Smith
Lawrence Smith
Rene Smith
St. Clair Smith
George Stadsklev
Edwin Stadsklev
C. C. Stech
Mark Stephenson
Arthur L. Strum
Alvin Swanson
Leonard Swanson
Eugene Sweet
Morton Taubman
*Otway Thomas
*Ernest Tiffany
Ralph Troge
*Emmanuel Troutman
Lloyd Vanderly
Morris Voedisch
Roy Wahl
F. S. Wegener
William Wallace
Alfred Ward
Charles Watson
Edmund Welsh
*Lee Welsh
Carl Westover
Walter Wies
Dayton Williams
Harry Williams
Leslie Wolverton
RED CROSS NURSES
Harold Woods
Edna Pryer
Hazel Greeno
Belle Granger
Myrtle Klabunde
Irene Wegener
Ruth Wenz
K. C. SECRETARY
M. M. Guhin
* Deceased.
LINCOLN HALL
IS COMPLETED
NEW DORMITORY OCCUPIED
Finest Ladies' Hall in Northwest at
N. N. I. S.
Lincoln Hall, for years the dream
of Normalites, is a reality.
The splendid new ladies' hall, the
best and most completely equipped
in the Northwest, looms up on the
campus north of Graham Hall, a
pride to the Northern Normal and to
the state of South Dakota.
Early last fall the work on the
structure began. The Madsen Construction
company of Minneapolis,
which had won the contract for the
construction of the dormitory, began
to move huge derricks and concrete
mixers and other construction machinery
to the site of the edifice.
Workmen began to dig the basement,
and in a few weeks the concrete
walls of the ground floor were
in place. No sooner had the cement
workers finished the foundation than
the brick layers got busy, and before
cold weather halted the work,
the first story brickwork had been
completed.
After ceasing their work during
the winter, constructors got back to
work early this spring, and slowly
the immense dormitory reached skyward.
All summer dozens of men
were kept busy on the building, in
order that, despite shortage of men
and material for construction, it
might be finished in time for the
opening of school this fall.
After the builders had finished,
the interior decorators, the plumbers,
the electricians and other tradesmen
did their share, and the furniture
companies worked day and
night to get the furniture into the
new hall by the time school opened.
The postponement of school to October
1 gave more time to finish the
details of the work.
All through the last few weeks,
Mrs. Thome, with several faithful
helpers, stayed on the ground to supervise
the furnishing and to put up
curtains, get the dining hall ready,
and attend to dozens of minor details.
The big dormitory now is no longer
a dream or an ambition of the
Normal; it is a reality, and the finest
dormitory in the Northwest is on
the campus ready to accommodate
some of the young women who flock.
to the Northern Normal.
Description of Hall
It is in the shape of a huge L, and
is located about fifty feet north of
Graham Hall. to which it is connect-
(Continued on page 4)
LIST NAMES ON SERVICE
FLAG IS NOT COMPLETE
The list of names published this
week for the service flag is incomplete,
very likely, because the school
has not been able to find out all the
names that should be on the list.
Miss Hemenway is at present working
hard to complete the list, and
should additional names be found,
they will be published next week.
If you know of any names that
should be on the list, give them to
Mr. Crawford at the registrar's office
or to Miss Hemenway.

THE EXPONENT
NORTHERN NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL
Vol. XVII
ABERDEEN, SOUTH DAKOTA. NOVEMBER 23, 1918
No. 1
TEN NEW MEMBERS
FACULTY
N. N. I. S. ADDS TO STAFF
Many New Faces Among 1918-1919
Faculty
Although the N. N. I. S. has been
unfortunate in losing many of its
very competent instructors, it has
been exceedingly fortunate in securing
the services of noted educational
men and women to help carry on
the work of the coining year.
The University of Chicago is well
represented, no less than three of
the new instructors being graduates
of that institution. Miss Olson, instructor
in public speaking and expression,
has, since leaving the university,
been teaching at the Ellendale,
N. D., Normal. This last summer
she received her M. A. degree
from Chicago.
Miss Eloise Smith, a former graduate
of the N. N. I. S. and assistant
art supervisor here, has the past
year been attending the University
of Chicago, from which she; too, received
her degree. Miss Husband,
who is connected with the educational
department, is a graduate of
both our own school and the University
of Minnesota.
A new but not exactly strange
member of the faculty is J. W.
Thomas, a graduate of the University
of Nebraska, who has the past
four years been superintendent of
schools in Roberts county. During
this time he has taken active part in
the joint institute at the N. N. I. S.
He comes to succeed Mr. Guhin in
the rural school and extension departments.
In Professor Charles Worf we
have another superintendent, he having
served the most recent four years
in Burke county, N. D. Fred W.
Smith, who served on the N. N. I.
S. faculty until 1914, has returned
to his old duties here, after having
served a number of years as president
of the State School of Forestry
at Bottineau. N. D.
An altogether amiable and deep-thinking
man has come to us in the
person of M. R. Stoker, who is to
have an important part in the educational
department of the Normal.
He comes from the Mayville, N. D.,
State Normal. and is a graduate of
the Illinois State Normal University
and of the University of Chicago.
J. H. Jensen is an eastern man-a
graduate of the University of Michigan.
He conies to share the science
work with Professor Smith. John
W. Hover comes from Bloomington.
Ill.. where he has been supervisor of
manual training in the city schools.
He will have here the work Professor
Heckman has overseen for so
many years. Miss Nordness, who
is to teach ancient history and arithmetic,
has been a student at Carleton
and Yankton colleges, and comes
well qualified for the work she is to
do.
With these new instructors to assist
those whose work has been
here before this, the students will
find a teaching force fully able and
thoroughly willing to lead them
along the pathway to wider knowledge
and experience, and may thus
find themselves "all set" for a great
year.
THE N. N. I. S. SERVICE FLAG
ARMY AND NAVY
Allyn Ahlers
Louis Aldrich
James Alger
Norman Amos
George Anas
Alfred Anderson
Paul Armantrout
Ward Ashford
Charles Aube
Wendell Bacon
Roy O. Baker
Harold Bartlett
Paul Benz
Christian Bentz
Carroll Bickelhaupt
Charles Harold Blair
John Blair
Lewis Blomster
Lincoln Boyd
Charles Brady
Carl Bremer
Lloyd Brown
William Bubbers
Curtis Burnham
Lawrence Burns
Ralph Butcher
Francis Byrne
Malcolm Byrne
Eugene Carey
Earl Chester
Horace Cloninger
Harold Cochrane
Arthur Coleman
Russell Craven
Wilbur Crosley
Ray Cummins
Lloyd Daniels
James Daniels
John Darling
Hobart Deacon
Donald Dent
George Dell
Rurdette DeWitte
Harvey Dockum
Henry Draeger
Wendell E. Dunn
Wynn Eakins
Earl Eckert
Wade Edmunds
Alvin Erbe
Leo Erwin
William Esau
Castle Farish
Robert Fessenden
Harry N. Fitch
Arthur Flakoll
Charles Fleischmann
Thomas Foss
Andy Fossum
Bert Fox
John Fox
Mack Fox
James Freeland
Oswald Friel
Delbert Gallett
Ralph Garman
Benjamin Gibbon
Wevman Gifford
Wilford Gigear
Lee J. Gillis
Verne Goodspeed
C. O. Gottschalk
Oscar Granger
Roe Granger
Christian Gross
Clifford Gullickson
George Guhin
*Curtiss Hall
Carl Hallberg
Claude Hamerly
Bert Hanicker
Leland Hanicker
Leo Hanna
Jay Haring
Samuel Harding
Arthur Hay
Percy Heron
John Hickman
Archie Hite
Raymond Hoefs
Robert Hopper
Andrew Hoover
Kenneth Hoover
Culvene Hubbard
Ernest Huntington
William Huntington
John Imlay
Edward Jackson
John H. Jackson
John J. Jackson
Arthur .Jenson
Arthur L. Johnson
Arthur W. Johnson
Axel Johnson
Clarence Johnson
Emmons Johnson
Leslie Johnson
Stanley Johnson
David Jones
Lynn Jones
Walter Kepke
Paul W. Kieser
Finch Kimberly
Willis Klepfer
Clare Kneedy
Rudolph Kraushaar
William Kreiter
Ruble Lavery
Arthur Lee
Fred LeLacheur
John Lewis
Alfred Lindboe
Laurence Lippert
Lyle Littlefield
Lewis Lockington
Herbert Lovejoy
Elmer Lowe
Ira Lum
Selmer Lunde
Ross Lynch
Milton Magee
James Madden
James P. Maloney
Paul Maloney
George Maricle
J. Wesley Martinie
George Masteller
Edward Matthews
Andy Monson
Jay McCoy
Lynn McKee
James E. McKenna
Donald McLean
C. Arnold Merkle
Fred. Merkle
Benjamin Miller
David Minard
Bernard Morrow
Henry Munsch
Adolph Olander
Carl Olander
James Oliver
Oscar Olsen
Harry Olson
Antonius Papavasiliou
George Parden
Roger Patrick
Roscoe D. Perkins
Van Buren Perry
Harry Pinkerton
William Pinkerton
Curtis Poole
Frederick Price
Howard Price
John Price
Norman Quam
Lloyd Rechamp
Harold Reed
Francis Regan
Ernest Rehfeld
Hobart Richards
Fred Richter
Ernest Rhodes
Robert Ronayne
Raymond Roth
Robert Roth
Harold Safford
Thomas Scanlon
Bernhard Schley
Clayton Schmidt
Wayne Schuchardt
Emil Schutte
Philip Seaman
Ralph Seaman
Bruce Semple
Loren Shanley
Maurice Shanley
Maurice Shevlin
Frank Sieh
Archie Sills
W. Ivan Smith
Lawrence Smith
Rene Smith
St. Clair Smith
George Stadsklev
Edwin Stadsklev
C. C. Stech
Mark Stephenson
Arthur L. Strum
Alvin Swanson
Leonard Swanson
Eugene Sweet
Morton Taubman
*Otway Thomas
*Ernest Tiffany
Ralph Troge
*Emmanuel Troutman
Lloyd Vanderly
Morris Voedisch
Roy Wahl
F. S. Wegener
William Wallace
Alfred Ward
Charles Watson
Edmund Welsh
*Lee Welsh
Carl Westover
Walter Wies
Dayton Williams
Harry Williams
Leslie Wolverton
RED CROSS NURSES
Harold Woods
Edna Pryer
Hazel Greeno
Belle Granger
Myrtle Klabunde
Irene Wegener
Ruth Wenz
K. C. SECRETARY
M. M. Guhin
* Deceased.
LINCOLN HALL
IS COMPLETED
NEW DORMITORY OCCUPIED
Finest Ladies' Hall in Northwest at
N. N. I. S.
Lincoln Hall, for years the dream
of Normalites, is a reality.
The splendid new ladies' hall, the
best and most completely equipped
in the Northwest, looms up on the
campus north of Graham Hall, a
pride to the Northern Normal and to
the state of South Dakota.
Early last fall the work on the
structure began. The Madsen Construction
company of Minneapolis,
which had won the contract for the
construction of the dormitory, began
to move huge derricks and concrete
mixers and other construction machinery
to the site of the edifice.
Workmen began to dig the basement,
and in a few weeks the concrete
walls of the ground floor were
in place. No sooner had the cement
workers finished the foundation than
the brick layers got busy, and before
cold weather halted the work,
the first story brickwork had been
completed.
After ceasing their work during
the winter, constructors got back to
work early this spring, and slowly
the immense dormitory reached skyward.
All summer dozens of men
were kept busy on the building, in
order that, despite shortage of men
and material for construction, it
might be finished in time for the
opening of school this fall.
After the builders had finished,
the interior decorators, the plumbers,
the electricians and other tradesmen
did their share, and the furniture
companies worked day and
night to get the furniture into the
new hall by the time school opened.
The postponement of school to October
1 gave more time to finish the
details of the work.
All through the last few weeks,
Mrs. Thome, with several faithful
helpers, stayed on the ground to supervise
the furnishing and to put up
curtains, get the dining hall ready,
and attend to dozens of minor details.
The big dormitory now is no longer
a dream or an ambition of the
Normal; it is a reality, and the finest
dormitory in the Northwest is on
the campus ready to accommodate
some of the young women who flock.
to the Northern Normal.
Description of Hall
It is in the shape of a huge L, and
is located about fifty feet north of
Graham Hall. to which it is connect-
(Continued on page 4)
LIST NAMES ON SERVICE
FLAG IS NOT COMPLETE
The list of names published this
week for the service flag is incomplete,
very likely, because the school
has not been able to find out all the
names that should be on the list.
Miss Hemenway is at present working
hard to complete the list, and
should additional names be found,
they will be published next week.
If you know of any names that
should be on the list, give them to
Mr. Crawford at the registrar's office
or to Miss Hemenway.